NEWS
š„25TH AMENDMENT: Cabinet Holds SECRET Meeting to REMOVE Trump! āHe Is Unfitāā”
š„25TH AMENDMENT: Cabinet Holds SECRET Meeting to REMOVE Trump! āHe Is Unfitāā”
Shockwaves are rippling through Washington after reports emerged that the presidentās own cabinet held a secret emergency meeting to discuss invoking the 25th Amendment. Locked doors, confiscated phones, and a single explosive question dominated the room: is the president still fit to lead?
According to sources, the discussion wasnāt about politics or party loyalty. It was about capacity, judgment, and risk at the very top of the system.
The 25th Amendment is not a tool for punishing unpopular leaders or embarrassing scandals. It exists for extreme situationsāwhen the president becomes a danger to governance itself.
Insiders claim concerns have been building quietly for months, surfacing in moments of erratic decision-making and internal alarm.
This wasnāt theater for the public. It was an institutional fire drill, triggered when those closest to power believe the system may be cracking from within.
Supporters call the reports exaggerated and politically motivated, arguing that disagreement does not equal incapacity.
Critics argue the oppositeāthat ignoring warning signs is how democracies sleepwalk into crisis.
Whatās undeniable is the gravity of the move. Invoking the 25th Amendment would be one of the most dramatic actions in modern American history.
Political instability, however, doesnāt stay in Washington. Markets react instantly, investors hesitate, and uncertainty seeps into the real economy.
When power trembles at the top, hiring slows, prices rise, and ordinary people absorb the shock.
This isnāt about left versus right. Itās about control of the system and who decides when a leader becomes a liability.
History shows that elite power struggles are rarely clean, and they are never free.
The public is often told to pick sides, while decisions that shape their future are made behind closed doors.
Whether this is a coup in disguise or a constitutional safety valve depends on who you ask.
But the real question remains: when those in power fight to protect the system, why is it always the people who pay the price?
